For those who have not heard of any of these Macromedia products,
lets just say they are now widely used across the Internet and in art/design
firms all around the world. Macromedia Flash first surfaced some years ago and
although it seemed to many to be just a fancy graphic fad at the time, has since
developed into one of the most used Internet design technologies in circulation
today. There isn’t any doubt that some of the best looking sites on the Internet
use Flash to show off their fancy graphics and animation. Dreamweaver has gradually
become the best Web Design tool in the business, far superior to the last release
of FrontPage by Microsoft and GoLive! Created by Adobe. Next we have Fireworks,
this isn’t as well known as the other parts of the package but is very useful
in that it lets you create great web navigation, optimise graphics and introduce
animation to web pages. Finally we have Freehand, FreeHand MX has everything
you need to move seamlessly through concept, design, production, and publishing
in a streamlined graphics environment, all while working within a single document.
Reduce production time, easily repurpose content for the Internet, create new
Macromedia Flash content, and more.

We will start with Macromedia’s Dreamweaver MX program. This
little package is the darling of the web design industry at the current time
and rightly so. My previous favourite was a mixture of Adobe’s GoLive and Microsoft’s
basic Frontpage, but with Dreamweaver you can create some really fantastic looking
websites. Since the integration with UltraDev, you can now create dynamic database-driven
web applications.

When you first start using Dreamweaver MX you get to choose
from one of three interfaces, Designer, HomeSite/Coder or Version 4.0. Designer
looks like all of the other MX programs like Fireworks and Flash, while HomeSite/Coder
moves all of the tool panels to the left hand side of the screen; Version 4.0
looks like the last Dreamweaver release. Personally I find the Designer interface
the best one, and it is probably the one I would recommend the most as all of
the other MX programs go with that style.

Once you have selected the interface style that suits you,
we are into the main heart of Dreamweaver MX. Once there you have the main window,
which contains Code View Design View (WYSIWYG) and then a split-screen view,
which lets you see both code and how the site looks at the same time. In all
of the modes, the top bar contains an Insert toolbar with options for Layout,
Text, Frames and tables. Along the bottom you get a properties inspector, this
allows you to edit code such as font size, colour, type and add links and such
like.

On the right hand side of the screen are a number of power
tools for things such as Design (lets you check the validity of your work),
Code, Applications and files along with editing Style Sheets, accessing online
support. If you are brand new to Dreamweaver then the interface may be a little
overwhelming, but in all fairness to Macromedia, a tool like Dreamweaver needs
all of these windows and options and it wouldn’t be the same without them.

This latest version of Dreamweaver now combines bits and pieces
from all of Macromedia three old powerful packages, HomeSite, ColdFusion and
Ultra Dev. From HomeSite you get the HTML editor and tools like Code hints and
tag choosers and a snippets panel, this is a really great little feature that
lets you save bits of code that you use a lot so you don’t have to keep re-entering
it. ColdFusion integration means you can build powerful Internet applications.

Now that Dreamweaver has got UltraDev integrated with it,
Dreamweaver can now create data-driven web applications in ASP, JSP and ColdFusion.
Dreamweaver also helps you to build interactive elements like result pages,
database queries and such like. Similar to what Adobe GoLive offers.

If you are a web designer who likes to take advantage of more
in-depth coding or who wants to create a dynamic web application then Dreamweaver
is fantastic. If you are a beginner or someone who wants to learn more about
coding web pages, I still recommend Dreamweaver, but you may well be best sticking
with FrontPage as this package is very expensive.